A Very Easy Death
Une mort très douce — Beauvoir's 1964 short memoir of her mother's death, a foundational text on dying and the modern medicalisation of death
Tradition: Twentieth-century French existentialist memoir
A daughter's unsparing account of her mother's six-week dying — and an indictment of the medicalised lies that surrounded it
Beauvoir's 1964 short memoir of her mother's six-week dying (October-December 1963). The book records the cancer diagnosis (not disclosed to the mother), surgery, hospital stay, daily visits, the management of what their mother was told, and the death. Unsparing about the medical-bureaucratic apparatus — institutional indifference, systematic deception about prognosis, family complicity. One of the founding texts of modern philosophical-literary engagement with dying and a major source for the hospice movement.
Author
Editions cited
- Une mort très douce (Gallimard, 1964); English trans. Patrick O'Brian (Putnam, 1965)
School Embodiments
Principal twentieth-century philosophical-phenomenological account of a particular death.
"What I describe is what I saw and felt; abstraction would falsify it." (A Very Easy Death)
Applies existentialist framework — authenticity, mortality, responsibility — to particular dying.
"There is no 'natural' death; every death is an outrage." (A Very Easy Death)
Sharply realist about modern medical dying — bureaucratic structures, specific deceptions, institutional indifference.
"The hospital staff treated my mother as a body to be processed; we treated her as a person to be lied to." (A Very Easy Death)
Identifies underlying structures of modern death-denial.
"The deception about my mother's diagnosis was not any individual's choice but the production of a whole system." (A Very Easy Death)
Although secular, seriousness about mortality and dignity of dying resonates with religious-theological readers.
"What we owed each other in her dying — these are religious questions even for those without religious vocabulary." (A Very Easy Death)
Practical-realist about difficult choices a family faces; documents the difficulty rather than prescribing.
"I do not say what we should have done differently; what I say is what we did, what it cost, what it taught me." (A Very Easy Death)
Continental-philosophical tradition.
Internal Tensions
Book's status as both intimate memoir and political-philosophical critique variously assessed; influence on the hospice movement and philosophy-of-dying tradition continuous.
I. Time
Six weeks of dying Oct-Dec 1963; lifetime of mother-daughter relation.
Attributes
II. Space
Paris hospital room; family apartments.
Attributes
III. Matter
Dying body of the mother; institutional matter of hospital.
Attributes
IV. Observer
Beauvoir and her sister as daughter-observers.
Attributes
V. Energy
Diminishing biological energies; emotional-relational energies.
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VI. Information
Medical information filtered; felt-relational information recorded.
Attributes
Personas with the nearest attribute fingerprint
Historical figures whose own classification on the same six-dimensional grid lands closest to this work's. Computed by attribute-agreement on coordinates both address.
Computed school proximity
The work's attribute fingerprint scored against all schools using the same quiz scorer. Useful as a sanity check on the hand-curated embodiments above.
How A Very Easy Death resolves each dilemma
48 resolved positions across 4 dimensions, including 3 distinctive where the majority of schools go the other way · 9 unaligned.
Each dimension is sorted so minority positions come first. Mainstream positions are folded into an expandable list.
Time · 9 dilemmas · 3 distinctive
Persistence, the future, and the direction of becoming.